There is little dispute that the early poem of William Wordsworth (1770-1850) called An Evening Walk (1793) draws heavily on eighteenth-century descriptive traditions. Wordsworth made explicit connections to Thomson Gray and other eighteenth-century poets in textual allusions. Wordsworth’s relationship to his eighteenth- century precursors has dominated critical reaction to the poem, but in a specific, indeed, limited manner, focusing on Wordsworth's ability to break free of his influences. Because the mainstream of twentieth-century criticism represented Romanticism (the late-eighteenth to early-nineteenth-century movement of which Wordsworth became a defining figure) as a salutary revolt against the sedate norms of eighteenth-century culture, the fortunes of the poem have waxed or waned according to how solid a case could be made for placing it on the far side of the Romantic divide.
In the context in which it appears “solid” most nearly means
unanimous
sound
compact
hard
wise
Select one answer choice.

